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Environmental Impacts on Infectious Disease: A Literature View of Epidemiological Evidence

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-10, 02:49 authored by Peter Sly, B Trottier, A Ikeda-Araki, D Vilcins
Background: This article summarises a session from the recent Pacific Basin Consortium for Environment and Health Focus meeting on Environmental Impacts on Infectious Disease. Objective: To provide an overview of the literature underpinning the presentations from this session. Methods: References used in developing the presentations were obtained from the presenters. Additional references were obtained from PubMed using key words from the presentations. Findings and Conclusions: 1. The Hokkaido longitudinal children’s study has found that exposure to chemicals in early life, such as persistent organic pollutants and per/polyfluorinated compounds, is associated with a range of immunological outcomes such as decreased cord blood IgE, otitis media, wheeze, increased risk of infections and higher risk of food allergy. 2. Epidemiological evidence links exposure to poor air quality to increased severity and mortality of Covid-19 in many parts of the world. Most studies suggest that long-term exposure has a more marked effect than acute exposure. 3. Components of air pollution, such as a newly described combustion product known as environmentally persistent free radicals, induce oxidative stress in exposed individuals. Individuals with genetic variations predisposing them to oxidative stress are at increased risk of adverse health effects from poor air quality.

History

Journal

Annals of Global Health

Volume

88

Pagination

91-

Location

United States

ISSN

2214-9996

eISSN

2214-9996

Language

en

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Ubiquity Press, Ltd.